Power control current sharing circuit

ABSTRACT

A load balancing circuit comprising a first power source, a first field effect transistor (FET) device having a drain terminal connected to the first power source and a source terminal connected to a first node, a first resistor connected to the first node and a second node, a load connected to the second node, a second FET device having a drain terminal connected to the first node and a source terminal connected to the second node, a third FET device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node, and a second resistor connected to a base terminal of the third FET device and the first node.

TECHNICAL FIELD

The present disclosure relates to electrical circuits, and particularly to an electrical circuit that includes power controllers arranged in parallel that control power for various loads.

BACKGROUND

Solid state power controllers (SSPC) often use power field effect transistor (FET) devices to switch line voltages that power loads. The FETs have maximum current and power dissipation ratings, and under some transient states, the current or power in the FETs may exceed the maximum current ratings and damage the FETs.

SUMMARY

According to an exemplary embodiment, a load balancing circuit comprising a first power source, a first field effect transistor (FET) device having a drain terminal connected to the first power source and a source terminal connected to a first node, a first resistor connected to the first node and a second node, a second resistor connected to the second node and a third node, a second FET device having a source terminal connected to the third node, a drain terminal connected to a load, and a gate terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device, a third FET device having a drain terminal connected to the first node and a source terminal connected to the second node, a fourth FET device having a source terminal connected to the second node and a drain terminal connected to the third node, a first bipolar device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node, a second bipolar device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the second FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node, a third resistor connected to a base terminal of the first bipolar device and the first node, and a fourth resistor connected to a base terminal of the second bipolar device and the third node.

According to another exemplary embodiment, a load balancing circuit comprising a first power source, a first field effect transistor (FET) device having a drain terminal connected to the first power source and a source terminal connected to a first node, a first resistor connected to the first node and a second node, a load connected to the second node, a second FET device having a drain terminal connected to the first node and a source terminal connected to the second node, a third FET device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node, and a second resistor connected to a base terminal of the third FET device and the first node.

According to another exemplary embodiment, a system comprises a first power source, a load, a first load balancing switching circuit operative to control power distribution from the first power source to the load, a second load balancing switching circuit operative to control power distribution from the first power source to the load, a controller operative to control a state of the first switching circuit and a state of the second switching circuit.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Exemplary embodiments and features of the present disclosure will now be described by way of example only, and with reference to FIGS. 1 to 2, of which:

FIG. 1 illustrates a diagram of an exemplary embodiment of a circuit.

FIG. 2 a block diagram of an exemplary embodiment of a system with the circuit of FIG. 1.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

When power controllers such as, for example, solid state power controllers (SSPCs) are connected in parallel to a load, a capacitive load inrush of current or an inductive load turn off may occur. During a capacitive load inrush, the field effect transistor (FET) devices in the SPPC may be driven into the linear region. During such an event, the capacitive load inrush current may exceed the rating of the FET devices, which may cause the most heavily loaded SSPC to trip to an off state or be damaged. The tolerances for FET devices in the linear region may vary amongst components, for example, gate threshold voltage tolerances variances in FET devices with similar specifications may result in one channel carrying a substantial portion of the load current. Such a condition may damage the FET device carrying the larger share of the load current.

The embodiments described herein allow the SPPC channels that are arranged in parallel to share the load during a turn on current inrush into a capacitive load and during an inductive turn off current collapse. In this regard, the SSPC channels are solid state power controllers arranged in parallel that each receive power from, for example, a common feed input. For example a circuit board may receive a substantial size 3 phase feed from a primary source and include a number of SSPC devices that can all be used individually for loads or combined together into groups to form various size load channels.

FIG. 1 illustrates a diagram of an exemplary circuit 100. The circuit 100 is configured to control alternating current (AC) power; alternate embodiments may be configured to control direct current (DC) power. The circuit 100 includes a power feed 102 and outputs power to a load 104. A sensor 125 is arranged to sense the current output by the power feed 102. A first FET device 108 a has a drain terminal connected to the current sense resistor 106, a source terminal connected to a node 101, and a gate terminal connected to a controller 110. A first resistor 112 a is connected to the node 101 and the node 103. A second resistor 112 b is connected to the node 103 and a node 105. A second FET device 108 a has a source terminal connected to the node 105, a drain terminal connected to the load 104, and a gate terminal connected to the controller 110. In the illustrated embodiment, the FET devices 108 a and 108 b include metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) type FET devices however; alternate embodiments may include other types of FET devices.

A third FET device 114 a has a drain terminal connected to the node 101, a source terminal connected to the node 103, and a gate terminal connected to the controller 110. A fourth FET device 114 b has a source terminal connected to the node 103, a drain terminal connected to the load 105, and a gate terminal connected to the controller 110. The FET devices 114 a and 114 b are relatively smaller, lower voltage FETs with a lower on resistance than the FET devices 108 a and 108 b. In the illustrated embodiment, the FET devices 114 a and 114 b include MOSFET type FET devices however; alternate embodiments may include other types of FET devices.

A first bipolar device 116 a has a collector terminal connected to the controller 110, an emitter terminal connected to the node 103, and a base terminal connected to the node 101 via a third resistor 118 a. A second bipolar device 116 b has a collector terminal connected to the controller 110, a emitter terminal connected to the node 103, and a base terminal connected to the node 105 via a fourth resistor 118 b. In the illustrated embodiment, the devices 116 a and 116 b are bipolar transistor type devices however; alternate embodiments may include other types of devices.

In operation, the circuit 100 forces sharing between SSPC channels arranged in parallel during a turn on current inrush into a capacitive load and during an inductive turn off current collapse. In this regard, during a capacitor load turn on during the positive half cycle, the controller output line 120 outputs a low voltage when or before the controller output line 122 outputs an ON signal. Thus, the FET devices 114 a and 114 b are off during the load turn on. When the controller 114 outputs an ON signal via the output line 122, the FET devices 108 a and 108 b are turned on and the current flows from the power feed 102 through the FET device 108 a, through the resistors 112 a and 112 b and the FET device 108 b to the load 104. The resistors 112 a and 112 b induce a voltage drop proportional to the load current. If the voltage drop exceeds the base emitter threshold of the device 116 a, then the circuit 100 limits the current putting the FET device 108 a into linear operation range. When the FET device 108 a is operating in linear operation range, the voltage to the load is reduced, which causes other channels (i.e., circuits 100) arranged in parallel that may not be at the current limit point of the respective FET 108 devices to carry more of the current load. This results in balancing the load between parallel circuits 100 with the drops in the base emitter voltages of the devices 116 regulating the currents in the respective circuits 100. If all the channels 100 in parallel enter into the current limiting mode, then the voltage to the load will be reduced until either the load charges up the load capacitance or until the control unit 110 decides that the load is shorted and turns off all parallel channels 100. This allows the circuit to also help limit large surge transients from the source feeder 102. When the capacitive load is charged, the load current will drop to a steady state. Once the load is at steady state, the controller 110 outputs a high signal on the control line 120. The high signal on the control line 120 turns the FET devices 114 a and 114 b on such that the FET devices 114 a and 114 b conduct current, which effectively shorts the resistors 112 a and 112 b to reduce the steady state power dissipation

The control line 124 is connected to node 103. The control line 124 is the reference for switching all of the devices on and off. When the channel 100 is off it substantially follows the negative half wave of the feed 102 due to the body diode of the FET device 108 a. When the channel is ON then the control line 124 is connected to both the feed 102 and load 104 and follows the feed voltage throughout the full AC cycle. Since the control line 124 floats with the AC cycle, then the controller 110 either floats or level shifts the signals 120 and 122 to be relative to the control line 124. The controller 110 uses the sensor 125 input to determine when the inrush has reached steady state or whether there is a fault on the line instead of an inrush as the fault would grow in current load and the inrush would peak and decay.

During a turn off routine of an inductive load, the control line 120 is set by the controller 110 to an off or low state when or prior to setting the control line 122 to an off or low state. When the control line 120 is set an off or low state, the FET devices 114 a and 114 b turn off and the current flows through the resistors 112 a and 112 b. When the control line 122 is set to a low state, the FET devices 108 a and 108 b are set to off. When the FET devices 108 a and 108 b are set to off, the inductive load drives the FET devices 108 a and 108 b into linear operation since the inductive load forces the load voltage to negative. The resistors 112 a and 112 b induce a voltage drop proportional to the channel current, and provides improved load sharing across the channels. The load 104 may include, for example, a protective clamp detection device that transfers an inductive voltage spike to the gates of the FET devices 108 a and 108 b.

FIG. 2 illustrates a block diagram of an exemplary system 200 that includes the circuit 100 described above. In this regard, the system 200 includes a power feed 102 that provides power to the circuits 100 a, 100 b, and 100 c respectively. The controller 110 sends control signals and receives sensor signals to the circuits 100 a, 100 b, and 100 c. The circuits 100 a, 100 b, and 100 c provide power to the load 104 in parallel. The illustrated embodiment includes a single controller 110. However, alternate embodiments may include any number of controllers arranged or integrated to control the system 200 as described above.

The embodiments described above provide load balancing between channels arranged in parallel that provide power to a load. The balancing is operative to protect the switching circuits that control power distribution to the load.

Although the figures and the accompanying description describe particular embodiments, it is to be understood that the scope of this disclosure is not to be limited to such specific embodiments, and is, instead, to be determined by the scope of the following claims. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A load balancing circuit comprising: a first power source; a first field effect transistor (FET) device having a drain terminal connected to the first power source and a source terminal connected to a first node; a first resistor connected to the first node and a second node; a second resistor connected to the second node and a third node; a second FET device having a source terminal connected to the third node, a drain terminal connected to a load, and a gate terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device; a third FET device having a drain terminal connected to the first node and a source terminal connected to the second node; a fourth FET device having a source terminal connected to the second node and a drain terminal connected to the third node; a first bipolar device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node; a second bipolar device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the second FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node; a third resistor connected to a base terminal of the first bipolar device and the first node; and a fourth resistor connected to a base terminal of the second bipolar device and the third node.
 2. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising a sensor operative to sense a current output from the first power source.
 3. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising a controller operative to receive a signal indicating a current output from the first power source.
 4. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising a controller operative to control a state of the first FET device and the second FET device.
 5. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising a controller operative to control a state of the third FET device and the fourth FET device.
 6. The circuit of claim 1, further comprising a controller operative to control a state of the first FET device, the second FET device, the third FET device, and the fourth FET device.
 7. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the gate terminal of the first FET device and the gate terminal of the second FET device are connected to a controller operative to control a state of the first FET device and the second FET device.
 8. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the gate terminal of the third FET device and the gate terminal of the fourth FET device are connected to a controller operative to control a state of the third FET device and the fourth FET device.
 9. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the first FET device and the second FET device include a metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) device.
 10. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the third FET device and the fourth FET device include a MOSFET device.
 11. The circuit of claim 1, wherein the first bipolar device and the second bipolar device include a bipolar junction transistor device.
 12. A load balancing circuit comprising: a first power source; a first field effect transistor (FET) device having a drain terminal connected to the first power source and a source terminal connected to a first node; a first resistor connected to the first node and a second node; a load connected to the second node; a second FET device having a drain terminal connected to the first node and a source terminal connected to the second node; a first bipolar device having a collector terminal connected to a gate terminal of the first FET device and an emitter terminal connected to the second node; and a second resistor connected to a base terminal of the first bipolar device and the first node.
 13. The circuit of claim 12, further comprising a sensor operative to sense a current output from the first power source.
 14. The circuit of claim 12, further comprising a controller operative to receive a signal indicating a current output from the first power source.
 15. The circuit of claim 12, further comprising a controller operative to control a state of the first FET device.
 16. The circuit of claim 12, further comprising a controller operative to control a state of the second FET device. 